(SEO), (SERP), (NLP), Metaphor, Analogy, Metonyms

LINGUISTICS ORGANIC SEARCH ENGINE THEORY
(LOSE-T) PART II

Google’s search query provides autocompletion, where it autocorrects, alters and transforms unfinished or misspelled lexicons into complete syntax. The autocompletion isn’t bias towards literal syntax because it takes into account nonliteral phrases such as idioms, metaphor, analogy, metonymy, adages and proverbs etc! What’s interesting about metonymy is it’s a figure of speech used within close proximity or adjacent to its reference-point; “New York,” to refer to “People,” or “Whitehouse,” to refer to the “President.” There’s an established independence between the semantics and pragmatics of metonyms, in that their substitutive usage in relations to another share no parity beyond its adjacent proximity.

This is the biggest differentiating factor between metonyms and metaphors; the former is an adjacent association or relationship within the context of proximity, and the latter correlates the parity between unrelated form. There’s a disparity between the nonliteral methods in which metonyms and metaphors are coalesced, and the only relationship that synthesizes them is their figure of speech usage and nonliteral applications they implicate in problem solving. Metonyms are quite peculiar devices because the cognitive mappings are predicated on hyponymic and hypernymic forms, in that their close proximity or adjacent reference-points are encoded into subordinate and superordinate taxonomy. See Part VI Search Engine Optimization (SEO), (SERP), (NLP), Paronyms, Hyponyms, Meronyms, Hypernyms

Metonyms are literary substitutes that renders an association, and this governed by an underlying taxonomy; unlike metaphors and analogies where the commonalities are centered around the parallel mappings of characteristics and relationships between disciplines, metonyms expresses a close substitutive expression. A sorta horizontal nonlinear classification that serve as an independent or absolute entity when removed from its adjacent reference. Unlike “blue, and red,” are the hyponyms of “colors,” and “colors,” are the hypernyms of “blue, and “red,” metonyms are less restrictive in that it can associate with any concept within close proximity of different associative elements.

Metaphors are finding commonalities between different forms of existence; paralleling two mutually exclusive forms using linguistic units and paring their characteristics. An example is attributing the glow of the “sun,” to someone’s “glittering smile;” hence a word like “dog;” “he ate like a dog,” “man is a dog,” “stop acting like a dog,” “that’s my dog,” “what’s up big dawg,” are innumerable metaphors with myriad of nonliteral variants. “Dawg,” is a nonstandard homophone, where the pronunciations are identical with different spellings. The efficacy of Google’s algorithm to account for these extended nonliteral linguistic units are paramount to improve the quality of keyword searches.

Analogies are synonymous to metaphors because they’re both predicated on the parallels between different forms of existence, but they’re mutually exclusive in their parity. Analogies parallel the relationships between different elements by comparisons of their internal structures; while metaphors reference one concept with another in terms of their characteristics. Here are the distinctions; “the brain is like a computer;” the comparisons between the brain and a computer share similar characteristics, hence its metaphorical. Analogies extends the relationship by paralleling the internal structures of the brain, in terms of “neurons firing between synapses,” and a “computer processing power.”

There’s also two temporal studies of linguistics called diachronic and synchronic linguistics; the former is the historical analysis and the latter is a more contemporary analysis, or preceding at a specific point in time. Metaphors, analogy and metonyms are both diachronic and synchronic derivatives because of their variants and continuous evolving nonliteral forms; although diachronic development may serve as a historical analysis of nonliteral meanings..In order for Search Engine Optimization (SEO), to decipher the keywords of figurative devices, lexically and syntactically, search queries must take into account the diachronic and synchronic analysis, and the myriad of senses associated with lexicons nonliteral constituents…